Kalen DeBoer’s third season at Alabama is going to be judged in the middle of the schedule, not the start and not the finish.
The Crimson Tide open with a manageable stretch and close with a schedule that looks workable enough on paper. But everything in between is where the season gets real.
From Oct. 10 through Nov. 7, Alabama faces the kind of run that can shape how the fan base feels about DeBoer long after the final whistle.
Alabama’s non-conference slate includes East Carolina, Florida State and Chattanooga, all at home. In SEC play, the Tide get four home games and five road trips. They’ll host South Carolina, Georgia, Texas A&M and Auburn, while traveling to Kentucky, Mississippi State, Tennessee, LSU and Vanderbilt.
That October-to-early-November stretch is the heart of it. Split those games, and Alabama is in strong shape for the College Football Playoff.
Miss too many, and the season starts to tilt the wrong way fast. The Nick Saban era is over, and this is the year DeBoer has to make his own mark.
Here are the five games that will define Alabama’s season.
- LSU Tigers (Nov. 7: Baton Rouge, LA)
No game carries more playoff weight than Alabama’s trip to LSU after the bye. This is DeBoer’s first shot at Lane Kiffin football, and the timing makes it even bigger.
LSU enters the season playoff-viable, though Brian Kelly still has to rebuild a defense that wasn’t finished last year. LSU also has a tougher schedule than Alabama.
By the time this game arrives, both teams could easily be sitting with one or two losses. LSU is more likely to have picked up another blemish before Alabama gets there, but the bigger picture is hard to miss: it’s difficult to see both teams making the College Football Playoff out of the SEC with Georgia and Texas above them.
If the SEC lands four teams in the playoff, it may be Alabama or LSU. Not both.
- Georgia Bulldogs (Oct. 10: Tuscaloosa, AL)
Georgia belongs near the top of any list like this. It’s the toughest game on Alabama’s schedule, and for good reason.
The Bulldogs have won the SEC the last two years and made the College Football Playoff both times. Alabama has had plenty of success against Georgia over the years, but Georgia won the most recent meeting, in Atlanta for the SEC title.
A win here would mean more for Alabama’s playoff hopes and national title chances than almost anything else on the schedule. A loss wouldn’t be fatal, but it would close off a major path. Alabama could still reach the playoff with a home loss to Georgia, but it would likely end any realistic shot at getting back to Atlanta for a rematch in the championship game.
Beating Georgia is always a statement. Losing to Georgia narrows the road.
- Tennessee Volunteers (Oct. 17: Knoxville, TN)
If there’s one game Alabama absolutely cannot afford to lose, it might be this one. The road trip to Tennessee sits right in the middle of the season’s most dangerous stretch, and a stumble in Knoxville could put the Tide’s playoff hopes in serious trouble.
Tennessee is probably the least likely of the five teams in this discussion to make the College Football Playoff. Alabama has had the better of the rivalry over the last two decades, but the Vols have given the Tide plenty of trouble in Knoxville lately. Tennessee also has work to do on defense and at quarterback this season, though Alabama has its own issues there too.
A win would feel like relief. A loss would set off alarms.
- South Carolina Gamecocks (Sept. 26: Tuscaloosa, AL)
This is the one game outside the brutal middle stretch that still jumps off the page. Alabama avoids a ranked opponent before Georgia, but South Carolina has been a tough out for the Tide in recent years. The Gamecocks were nearly a playoff team two seasons ago, and they could come in with plenty to prove.
With Shane Beamer’s job on the line this season and possibly the final year in Columbia for stars like LaNorris Sellers and Dylan Stewart, South Carolina should come in with urgency. That makes this feel like a trap game, especially for a DeBoer team that could afford to drop a game it should not lose.
The last thing Alabama needs is to head into the Georgia game already carrying an SEC loss.
- Texas A&M Aggies (Oct. 24: Tuscaloosa, AL)
Texas A&M may be one of the two toughest teams on Alabama’s schedule, even with this one coming in Tuscaloosa. It lands right in the middle of the Oct.
10-Nov. 7 gauntlet, which raises the stakes even more. A win would go a long way toward putting Alabama in playoff position.
A loss would not be as damaging as some others on this list.
The Aggies were a playoff team a year ago, and Mike Elko has them moving in the right direction. Still, this is the kind of game that comes with a wide range of outcomes.
Alabama can win it, but it won’t be crushed for losing it. Compared with Georgia, Tennessee and LSU, the emotional swing is different.
A win over Texas A&M is not as big as beating Georgia. A loss is not as bad as losing to Tennessee or LSU.
In Other News...
Alabama Fans Finally Have A Freshman To Watch In The Backfield
CBS Sports writer Brad Crawfords latest look at the SEC freshmen to watch this fall gave Alabama fans a reason to keep an eye on the backfield, with running back EJ Crowell making the cut among a dozen first-year names across the league. The Crimson Tide also landed wide receiver Cederian Morgan on the list, but Crowell is the one who stands out most for a team that has been looking for a fresh spark in its ground game.
Crowells appeal is obvious enough: Alabama needs young talent to push for carries, and his spring was interrupted by injury issues that left some questions hanging over how quickly he can settle in. Crawfords list also touched on the bigger SEC picture, with Tennessee quarterback Faizon Brandon drawing attention in a battle for the starting job and Vanderbilt quarterback Jared Curtis left off because of the difficulty of Vanderbilts schedule, but for Alabama the focus is on whether Crowell can become part of the answer in the backfield. [Read more 🡒]
Austin Mack Had The Rose Bowl Moment Alabama Needed To See
Austin Mack spent the buildup to the 2026 Rose Bowl doing what backup quarterbacks are supposed to do and rarely get credit for: staying ready without knowing when the call would come. For Alabama, the game became a test of depth and composure after Ty Simpson was forced out, and Mack was the one who stepped in to steady things. He had waited patiently for this kind of chance, leaning on the preparation and support that had carried him through the long run-up to a stage like this.
Macks first real spotlight was a meaningful one, even in a loss to Indiana, because he guided Alabama on its only scoring drive of the day. The result did not change, but the moment mattered for a program that will need to know what it has behind its starter. For Mack, it was a glimpse of the maturity Alabama has been hearing about all along, and a reminder that the next quarterback up may already be more game-ready than the outside world realizes. [Read more 🡒]
Alabama May Be Reliving A Painful Texas Recruiting Pattern
Alabama has spent plenty of time battling Texas on the recruiting trail, and lately the Longhorns have had the upper hand in a way that should feel familiar and frustrating in Tuscaloosa. Recent head-to-heads have gone Texas way on several targets, including Auburn transfer Cam Coleman and NC State transfer Hollywood Smoothers, both of whom had been tied to Alabama before ending up with the Longhorns. Texas also already sits on commitments from a few Alabama targets in the 2027 class, a sign that this is not just about one cycle but about a broader push for talent.
The next swing in that rivalry could come at receiver, where Alabama is in the mix for five-star Monshun Sales and Texas appears to be building real momentum. The bigger issue for Alabama is not simply losing individual battles, but watching a resource-rich opponent keep showing up with the kind of backing that can change a recruiting race late. If the pattern holds, this could become less a one-off miss and more a warning about how hard it may be for Alabama to keep pace when the checks get bigger. [Read more 🡒]
